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Clinical Toxicology, 34( l), 119- 126 (1996)
REVIEW
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Silver Products for Medical Indications:
Risk-Benefit Assessment
Man C. Fung, MD; Debra L. Bowen, MD
Center of Drug Evaluation and Research, Food and
Drug Administration, Rockville, Maryland
ABSTRACT
Background: Legitimate medicinal use of silver-containing products has
dramatically diminished over the last several decades. Recently, however, some
manufacturers have begun to enthusiastically promote oral colloidal silver proteins
as mineral supplements and f o r prevention and treatment of many diseases.
Indiscriminate use of silver products can lead to toxicity such as argyria.
Objective: To assist health care professionals in a risk versus benefit assessment
of over-the-counter silver-containing products, we herein examine the following
issues: historical uses, chemistry, pharmacology, clinical toxicology, case reports
of adverse events in the literature, and the recent promotion of over-the-counter
silver products. Other sources of silver exposure (including environmental and
dietary) and EPA exposure standards are discussed. A list of currently available
silver products is provided f o r easy reference and screening. Conclusions: We
emphasize the lack of established effectiveness and potential toxicity of these
products.
INTRODUCTION
was treated with silver arsphenamine in the early
20th century. Colloidal silver proteins (CSP) were
used in cold remedies until the middle of this
century. With the development of many newer and
more effective alternatives, the legitimate use of
silver products has dwindled so only a few prescription silver-containing drug products remain available.
Silver medicinals have been used in the past for
many ailment^.'.^ During the Middle Ages, Lunar
Caustic (silver nitrate) was given for patients with
nervous disorders. Epilepsy was also treated by
silver nitrate until the late 19th century, and syphilis
Correspondence: Dr. Debra L. Bowen, Director of Medical Review Staff, 7520 Standish Place, Suite #251, Rockville, MD
20855. Tel: 3011594-2232; Fax: 3011594-3429.
119
Copyright
@
1996 by Marcel Dekker, Inc.
Fung and Bowen
120
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However, manufacturers of some health food
products have recently begun promoting CSP to the
public as an essential mineral supplement and cureIn order to provide further information to
health-care professionals and consumers, presented
herein are a review of the basic chemistry, pharmacokinetics, pharmacology, clinical toxicology, case
reports of adverse events, and an evaluation of the
validity of current claims for colloidal silver proteins
and other silver products.
Also included are
summary data for available products, as well as
environmental and dietary sources of silver.
Physical and Chemical Properties
CSP are prepared by mixing silver nitrate, sodium
hydroxide, and gelatin and diluting this mixture with
water to the desired concentration.
These
ingredients react together, forming a complex
colloidal aggregate. Historically, many colloidal
silver suspensions have been
Commonly used CSP are Mild Silver Protein (1923% silver) and Strong Silver Protein (7.5-8.5%
silver). Mild Silver Protein contains a higher silver
concentration which is less ionizable, causes minimal
irritation, and is bacteriostatic. Conversely, Strong
Silver Protein contains less silver which is more
ionizable, irritating, and is purported to be
bactericidal. The currently promoted health food
store products appear to be further dilutions of these
two forms of CSP.
Inorganic silver compounds are germicidal.233i5
Silver readily denatures proteins by binding to the
reactive groups of the proteins, causing precipitation.
Silver compounds inactivate enzymes by forming
hemisilver sulfides with sulfhydryl groups, Silver
can also bind amino, carboxyl, phosphate, and
imidazole groups. Shinogi and Maeizumi demonstrated that silver deposits in rat liver and binds with
high affinity to the sulfhydryl groups in cellular
components and basal membranes.' They also found
that silver can diminish the activities o f lactate
dehydrogenase and glutathione peroxidase and
peroxidation of membrane lipids.
Historical Uses'-7
Since the late 19th century, CSP have been
promoted for numerous medical indications.
Although CSP have been used to treat (or prevent)
gonorrhea and gonorrheal conjunctivitis due to
purported bacteriocidal properties, such treatment
has been largely replaced by less toxic antimicrobials
with substantiated effectiveness. In the past, such
products were also promoted as topicals for direct
application to mucous membranes in the nose, throat,
urethra, and colon. However, there is no evidence
that CSP are effective at these other sites and
toxicity has been reported. Although silver products
were infrequently promoted for oral use, benefits
have been even more questionable. The 1960
Edition of the US Dispensary states that "there is no
justification for this (internal) use either theoretically
or practically".7
Silver Exposure
Silver is the 47th element in the periodic table.
Due to wide industrial applications, a historically
high incidence of silver toxicity has been reported
but new occupational safety regulations have dramatically decreased this reported toxicity. Besides drug
or industrial exposures, silver can be ingested with
food and water. The EPA publishes a Reference
Dose (Rfd) which is an estimate of daily exposure to
the entire population (including sensitive subgroups)
that is unlikely to be associated with an appreciable
risk of deleterious effects during a lifetime." It is
based on a presumption that some threshold may
exist for certain toxic effects of a chemical such as
cellular necrosis independent of carcinogenicity.
The current Rfd for oral silver exposure is 5 pg/kg/d
with a critical dose estimated at 14 pg/kg/d for the
average person. The EPA also publishes safety
guidelines for silver in drinking water. The Maximum Contaminant Level Goal proposed by the EPA
for silver in the drinking water is < 0.1 mg/L."
Based on the current Rfd, for a 5 kg infant to a 70
kg adult, the maximal daily silver exposure should
be less than 25-350 p g / d . If the silver in drinking
water sources meets EPA guidelines, an average
person who drinks 2 L/d is exposed to less than 200
pg of silver. However, a regular daily diet may
contain up to about 90 pg of silver as a background
level of e x p o ~ u r e . ~For
' ~ ~example,
,~~
wheat flour
contains 0.3 p g l g , bran contains 0 . 9 p g / g , and
mushrooms contain up to several hundred p g / g of
silver. Milk which contains about 27-54 pg/L is also
a major contributor to daily silver intake.13 For
most food sources, local soil correlates highly with
measured silver concentrations.
121
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Silver Products for Medical Indications
Currently available CSP products promoted for
medicinal or mineral supplement purposes are reported to have an active silver ion concentration of
about 1-6 ppm (5-30 pg) per doses (Table 1).
Although the active ionizable silver concentration is
in the few ppm range, the total silver content of
individual products may be much higher. For
example, the previously available Argyrol 10%S S
Ophthalmic (Mild Silver Protein) has about 20
mg/mL of silver. In case of accidental ingestion by
a child, a 15 mL bottle would give a total of 300 mg
silver exposure. The highly variable silver concentrations in promoted drug products may add to
unnecessary silver exposure for consumers.
Current Promotion
Currently available CSP formulations in the health
food stores include oral suspensions, aerosols and
douches (Table IA). These products are being promoted as essential mineral supplements and advertised for use in diseases such as cancer, diabetes,
AIDS, and herpes. Their manufacturers have also
advanced an unsubstantiated hypothesis that silver
deficiency leads to impaired immunity which results
in cancer. 8
Regulatory History: Efficacy
Mild Silver Protein was once listed as an ingredient under review by the FDA as a potential antiseptic. However, an FDA Advisory Expert Panel
noted a lack of human efficacy data and recommended that sponsors conduct further studies to
substantiate effectiveness. Since the agency received
no further data, this ingredient was removed from
the over-the-counter (OTC) monograph in 1992.
Thus, no approved CSP products are available OTC.
A higher concentration (20% Argyrol SS) Mild
Silver Protein ophthalmic and other topical silver
nitrate and silver sulfadiazine preparations remain
available only by prescription (Table 1B). Silver
nitrate has been occasionally used as prophylaxis for
ophthalmia neonatorum in newborns and as a cauterizing agent for uncontrolled epistaxis and some skin
conditions (warts and corns). However, these silver
products are not without adverse effect^.'^-'^ For
example, burn treatment with silver nitrate can cause
methemoglobinemia, hypochloridemia, hyponatremia, and eschars that adhere to dressings. Due to these
effects, silver sulfadiazine has largely replaced silver
nitrate, although silver sulfadiazine may cause
leukopenia and nephrotic syndrome rarely.
Clinical Toxicology: Safety
In animals, research has demonstrated that silver
accumulates widely in the body. Although it was
originally believed not to penetrate the blood-brain
bamer, Rungby and Danscher showed that
parenterally administered silver salts can accumulate
in neurons and in protoplasmic glia cells of the brain
and spinal cord. l9 In a subsequent experiment, the
same authors found that mice exposed to either
peroral or parenteral administration of silver salts
became hypoactive compared to the untreated
controls, suggesting that silver intoxication could
have an influence on CNS function.20 Rungby also
demonstrated that silver can induce a decrease in the
total volume of developing hippocampal pyramidal
cells in fetal rats.21
Some researchers have suggested that Vitamin E
or selenium deficiency may increase susceptibility to
systemic silver toxicity. Wagner et al. and Bunyan
et al. have shown that hepatic necrosis can be
induced by administering silver preparations to
Vitamin E/selenium deficient rats.22-23 They
hypothesized that toxicity was due to a silver-induced
selenium deficiency that inhibits the synthesis of the
seleno-enzyme glutathione peroxidase.
Further,
Bunyan et al. showed that if rat diets were
supplemented with selenium or Vitamin E, exposure
to silver as high as 140 mg/kg/d was still well
to~erated.’~
When absorption is limited, systemic silver
toxicity occurs infrequently.
However, after
ingestion, up to 10% of silver salts may be
a b ~ o r b e d .Moreover,
~
absorption is increased from
disrupted mucous membranes or skin wounds such as
burns. Also, ingested soluble silver salts may
corrode the gastrointestinal mucosa. Occasionally,
death may result from local trauma, hemorrhagic
gastroenteritis, and shock.5
Upon systemic absorption, the highest concentrations of silver are found in the skin, liver, spleen,
and adrenals with lesser deposits in the muscle and
brain.2y3 Depending on the silver salt, the route of
administration, and the animal studied, the biologic
half-life is reported to range from days to month^.^^^
However, absorbed silver deposited in skin has a
much longer half-life. Excretion of silver is
Fung and Bowen
122
Table 1
List of Currently Promoted Silver Products
Unapproved Products
Market Product Name
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health
food
Manufacturer
Colloidal Silver various manufacturers
Golden Silver
Ox yGold
Silver Cidal
Advanced Colloidal
Ingredients
Promoted Uses
1-6 ppm CSP per dose
mineral supplement
“antibiotic“
Ingredients
Promoted Uses
ophthalmic
antiseptic
prevention of gonorrheal
ophthalmia neonatorum
wadcorn
Prescription Only Drug Products
Market Product Name
Manufacturer
Rx
Argyrol SS 20% Iolab
20% mild silver protein
Rx
Silver Nitrate
Lilly
1 % silver nitrate
Silver Nitrate
Gordon Labs
Silver Nitrate
Silvadene
Graham-Field
Marion Merrell Dow
SSD Cream
Boots
SSD AF
Thennazene
Boots
Sherwood
l o % , 25 %, 50% silver
nitrate
75% silver nitrate
10 mg/g silver
sulfadiazine
10 mg/g silver
sulfadiazine
1 % silver sulfadiazine
10 mg/g silver
sulfadiazine
Rx
wartlcorn
bum wounds
burn wounds
burn wounds
burn wounds
Information provided by the Nontraditional Drug Compliance Branch, Office of Compliance, Center for Drug
Evaluation and Research, Food and Drug Administration and the 1995 edition of Drug Facts and Comparisons
(Publisher: Wolters Kluwer Company, St. Louis).
primarily via fecal elimination with active biliary
causing argyria (Figure 1). The first sign of argyria
excretion. Previous studies have confirmed that even
is in the gingiva, a slate-blue silver line from the
inhaled silver is eliminated primarily in the f e c e ~ . ~ , ~deposition of metallic silver and silver sulfide
In humans, even trace amounts of silver may
pigment^.^^.^^
accumulate in the body and may reach an appreciable
In addition to these direct silver deposits, pigamount in later life depending on dietary preferences
mentation results from silver stimulation of melanoand local environmental levels.’ Additional sources
cytes, increasing melanin production.
Further,
include industrial exposure and indiscriminate use of
discoloration is more pronounced in sunexposed
silver-containing medicinals. Absorbed silver is
areas because photoactivation reduces silver. Argyria
widely distributed in the body and large amounts
is effectively irreversible and an important cosmetic
accumulate in the subepithelial portions of the skin
concern. Chelation therapy with British Antilewisite
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Silver Products for Medical Indications
123
Figure 1. This is a photograph of a 92-year-old Caucasian man who developed generalized argyria by applying silvercontaining nose drops daily for years, Diagnosis is confirmed by skin biopsy. The bluish-gray discoloration is more
pronounced in the sun-exposed areas such as face, neck, and nails but also involves the conjunctiva, sclera, and mucous
membranes. (Reproduced with pzrmission from Hospital Practice, October 15, 1994.)
(BAL) or D-penicillamine has been ineffective. 16726
Successful local reversals have rarely been reported
by intradermal injection with 6% sodium thiosulfate
or 1% potassium ferrocyanide although repeated injections for large areas remains impractical. 5
According to a 1973 submission to the FDA, 365
cases of argyria from 1802 to 1951 were reported in
the medical literature. However, argyria continues
to be reported. Lee and Lee reported a recent case
of generalized argyria in a 33-year-old woman who
self-treated her recurrent oral ulcers for six years
with a silver-containing product.27 The patient
developed skin discoloration after one year and
biopsies of oral mucosa and the forearm revealed
small silver granules scattered in the dermis, blood
vessels (most numerous in the basal laminae), and
hair follicles.
Steininger et al. reported generalized argyrosis
secondary to systemic use of silver in a 52-year-old
patient who had treated duodenal ulcer with 35 g of
a silver preparation for more than 18 years.28 The
patient subsequently died of cardiac failure and
autopsy showed generalized argyrosis. Besides skin
involvement, dense silver deposits were found in the
walls of most blood vessels, renal glomeruli, choroid
plexus, seminiferous tubules, and liver portal fields.
Internal silver deposition has also been reported to
cause neurologic deficits. Westhofen and Schafer
reported a 55-year-old woman who developed
progressive hypogeusia, hyposmia, vertigo, gait
disturbance, skin hypesthesia, and weakness after
self-treating for oral mycosis with a silver product
for nine years.29
Chemosensory tests and
electrophysiologic studies confirmed the clinical
findings. X ray microanalysis of the affected tissues
revealed silver sulfide deposits.
Upon further
examination by electronic microscopy, silver deposits
were found in basal membranes, macrophages,
elastic and collagenous fibers, perineurium of
peripheral nerves, and in necrotic cells of the oral
submucosa. The authors suggested deposition of the
insoluble silver sulfide over basal membranes and
neuronal structures as the cause of these conditions.
Generalized argyrosis can develop more quickly
if sufficient amounts are ingested. Jurecka reported
a 58-year-old patient who used silver-containing
tablets (exact amount unknown) for pharyngitis over
only a 18-month period and developed generalized
argyria.26 Diagnosis was confirmed by histology, X
ray micro-analysis, and electron microscopy.
Chelation therapy with D-penicillamine failed to
reverse this patient’s condition.
Fung and Bowen
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124
Marshall and Schneider reported a 46-year-old
patient who used a topical silver product about three
times per week to control recurrent gingival bleeding
caused by poorly fitting denture^.^' After about two
and a half years, the patient developed generalized
argyria. Argyria persisted despite discontinued use
of silver and the patient developed chronic
abdominal pain. The patient underwent gastroscopy
with biopsy where silver deposition in the connective
tissues of the stomach was found. During a
subsequent abdominal operation, diffuse argyria was
documented in multiple internal organs including
liver, spleen, intestines, and the peritoneum with the
highest pigmentation in the pancreas.
Besides systemic involvement, topical silver use
on mucous membranes has been reported to cause
argyrosis in tissues other than the skin. For example,
Timmins and Morgan reported a 68-year-old patient
who used a 1% Mild Silver Protein with ephedrine
nasal drops every night at bedtime for nasal
congestion for 35 years and developed local
argyrosis in the gingival margin of the mouth.31
Stammberger reported two cases of nasal argyrosis
after use of nasal silver products; one patient had
been using inhaled silver products for at least six
years. 32
Ocular argyrosis is quite common. The involved
eye turns bluish-gray or brownish-black. Loeffler
and Lee reported silver deposition in the wall of the
lacrimal sac of an 80-year-old patient who had used
CSP eyedrops to prevent eye soreness while
gardening.33 Deposition of silver selenide was found
in the extracellular matrix on elastic fibers and
within cells forming conglomerates in secondary
lysosomes.
Besides the use of CSP, other cases of argyrosis
have been reported secondary to industrial exposure.
Rosenman et al. reported ocular argyrosis in 20 out
of 30 New York factory workers manufacturing
silver nitrate and silver oxide products.34 Among
these subjects, 12 also had measurable silver blood
levels and six had generalized argyrosis. A direct
correlation was noted between the deposit levels and
the duration of employment. Many of these workers
also had other systemic complaints such as nausea,
headache, tiredness, and nervousness. Among the
ten workers with abdominal pain, there was a
statistically significant association of the blood silver
levels with this complaint.
Other reported cases of argyrosis are referenced
for interested readers .35-43 Besides argyria, silver
toxicity is rarely reported. However, industrial
exposure at high concentrations is associated with
systemic toxicity. 15316,44 Excessive use of silver
causes glomerular damage and proteinuria. Topical
use of silver nitrate in burns causes methemoglobinemia. Inhaled silver may cause metal fume fever
and chemical pneumonitis. The average amount of
exposure required to develop argyria is reported to
be 3.8 g of elemental silver.276 An average fatal
dose is about 10 g although some subjects have
apparently survived even after exposure to 30 g.
There is no specific antidote for silver. Treatment is
supportive.
There is a potential risk for the developing fetus
when pregnant women use silver products. A casecontrol epidemiology study was conducted by
Aschengrau et al. among women who delivered
infants from 1977 to 1980 in a Massachusetts
h ~ s p i t a l . ~ ’ Trace element levels of public water
were analyzed from the communities in which the
women resided during pregnancy. The relationship
between community drinking water quality and the
occurrence of late adverse pregnancy outcomes was
examined. After adjustment for confounding factors,
the results suggested some association between
maternal exposures to 0.001 mglL of silver in the
drinking water (1/100 of the EPA standard) and
some increase in fetal developmental anomalies (ear,
face, and neck). As the authors recognized, there
are inferential limitations to epidemiologic studies.
Further research is needed to explore these findings.
CONCLUSION
In this article, we have reviewed the basic
chemistry, pharmacokinetics, pharmacology, clinical
toxicology, case reports of adverse events, and have
outlined the regulatory history of OTC silvercontaining medicinal products, including colloidal
silver proteins. Environmental and dietary sources
of silver exposure have been presented along with
EPA safety guidelines. For easy reference, a table
of currently available silver products has been
provided. We have outlined what is known about
the safety and efficacy of available OTC silvercontaining products and have concluded that silver
has no known physiologic function and should not be
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Silver Products for Medical Indications
promoted as an essential mineral supplement.
Recent promotional assertions made about the
effectiveness of these products in numerous diseases
remain unsubstantiated.
Moreover, indiscriminate use of silver can lead to
irreversible toxicity and silver in drug products can
add to silver exposure from environmental sources
such as food and water. Silver is deposited in many
organs including neurons.
Argyria, the most
commonly reported adverse event, results from
accumulation of silver deposits in the skin below the
epidermis. We conclude that the risk exceeds the
unsubstantiated benefit for OTC silver-containing
products. Consequently, there are no FDA approved
CSP products available OTC.
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